but yeah, the Moore Swamp Thing was great, remember buying one out of idle curiousity and then going back to buy the entire run. plus, it gave us John Constantine which is a treat in and of itself.
― H (Heruy), Friday, 5 November 2004 12:46 (twenty-one years ago)
― danny boy, Sunday, 23 October 2005 15:56 (twenty years ago)
― David R. (popshots75`), Sunday, 23 October 2005 16:13 (twenty years ago)
― s1ocki (slutsky), Sunday, 23 October 2005 16:56 (twenty years ago)
is the current swamp thing worth reading? i like the characters/basic idea, but I feel worried at it being too po-faced.
― Special Agent Dale Koopa (orion), Sunday, 23 October 2005 17:37 (twenty years ago)
Seconded! Been a long time since I read them, tho.
― Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Sunday, 23 October 2005 18:24 (twenty years ago)
Doug Wheeler does a fair job of picking up where Veitch abruptly leaves off. It's an interesting run, let's say. Entertaining, overall. Millar's run is also quite decent.
Avoid the Nancy Collins run like the plague. It is one of the most badly-written runs on any comic ever.
Brian K. Vaughn's revamp: eh. What I've read of the newest revamp: very eh, bordering on ugh.
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Sunday, 20 November 2005 03:47 (twenty years ago)
― chap who would dare to tell uninteresting celeb spotting stories (chap), Sunday, 20 November 2005 19:15 (twenty years ago)
― mark s (mark s), Sunday, 20 November 2005 23:03 (twenty years ago)
― i0dine, Sunday, 20 November 2005 23:47 (twenty years ago)
― Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Monday, 21 November 2005 17:30 (twenty years ago)
i0dine, re: Diggle - The Losers has been fun rock-em-sock-em espionage stuff. Also, the techno-samurai mini he's doing w/ Leinil Francis Yu for Wildstorm (Silent Dragon) is probably the best Diggle I've read. I liked Adam Strange just fine, but not as much as most folk. And I didn't touch Swamp Thing.
Mark, wouldn't it be safe to say that your evidence for Moore's not-so-veryness would have to include his works by default? (Not that I disagree w/ you, per se - I think it's more a case of AM's greatness being blown out of proportion than AM being not-so-very.)
― David R. (popshots75`), Monday, 21 November 2005 17:37 (twenty years ago)
― Dan Selzer (Dan Selzer), Monday, 21 November 2005 19:28 (twenty years ago)
― kit brash (kit brash), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 01:38 (twenty years ago)
JUST PRINT THE FUCKING JESUS STORY ALREADY, YOU DOUCHEBAGS.
Love,Me
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 02:16 (twenty years ago)
― kit brash (kit brash), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 03:03 (twenty years ago)
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 03:09 (twenty years ago)
― kit brash (kit brash), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 11:46 (twenty years ago)
And I really dug the whole Matango storyline that came afterward. Although I realize I may be in the minority. But then I grew up reading Swamp Thing, so it has a warm & special place in my heart.
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 18:03 (twenty years ago)
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 18:06 (twenty years ago)
― chap who would dare to tell uninteresting celeb spotting stories (chap), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 18:17 (twenty years ago)
RELEASE THE HOUNDS.
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 18:41 (twenty years ago)
― chap who would dare to tell uninteresting celeb spotting stories (chap), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 18:47 (twenty years ago)
― David R. (popshots75`), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 19:49 (twenty years ago)
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 19:56 (twenty years ago)
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 22:01 (twenty years ago)
(Haven't read any of the Losers, btw; have the trifecta trade on queue.)
― i0dine, Tuesday, 22 November 2005 22:27 (twenty years ago)
http://www.horror-wood.com/plant.20.jpg
― David R. (popshots75`), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 23:21 (twenty years ago)
Yeah, i0dine, but Morrison's and Pollack's DPs were apples and oranges, really. GM's was about weirdness, RP's was about menstruation. Apples and oranges.
― Deric W. Haircare (Deric W. Haircare), Tuesday, 22 November 2005 23:43 (twenty years ago)
― i0dine, Wednesday, 23 November 2005 12:37 (twenty years ago)
I really, really like the Marty Pasko issues, especially the ones on the cruise ship - with aliens that become a giant squid because of infection by herpes, how can it go wrong? Liz and Dennis are great in all their issues, and there are genuine WTF??!?!?!? moments like Casey becoming an adult before your eyes via her psychic powers, or Harry Kay and the whole concentration camp/Golem plot. Plus he came up with the insectoid Arcane.
They really deserve a trade.
― aldo_cowpat (aldo_cowpat), Thursday, 24 November 2005 15:08 (twenty years ago)
― Britain's Obtusest Shepherd (Alan), Thursday, 24 November 2005 16:11 (twenty years ago)
― aldo_cowpat (aldo_cowpat), Thursday, 24 November 2005 16:20 (twenty years ago)
not a whole lot of talk about millar's run here?
― moonship journey to baja, Sunday, 28 October 2007 20:35 (eighteen years ago)
Andrew Farrell speaks highly of it.
― The Real Dirty Vicar, Sunday, 28 October 2007 22:45 (eighteen years ago)
What's not to like about G-Mo's MM's run? (actually not strictly true, the large-scale ELEMENTAL FITES were very dialogue heavy, perhaps too much so) The last bit, with a benevolent ruler over a transformed world, does feel a bit ripped off Miracleman though.
― aldo, Monday, 29 October 2007 10:40 (eighteen years ago)
Am I the only one who feels nonplussed by Moore's Swamp Thing? I've read three or four different collections, and while all of them have had some nice moments, there's also way way too many captions, often filled with purple prose, and all in all there's lot of the worst type of Moore pretentiouness. Also, the love story between Abby and Swamp Thing is presented in a very clichéd and fairy-tale like manner, even though Moore generally tries to keep the characters down to earth. All this feels especially weird since Moore had already done most of V for Vendetta and Miracleman before, and was writing Watchmen at the same time, so it's not like he was an inexperienced writer or anything.
― Tuomas, Monday, 29 October 2007 14:38 (eighteen years ago)
I think Swamp Thing maybe worked better in issues. That was the impression I formed when Vertigo reprinted it in black and white issues a while back.
― The Real Dirty Vicar, Monday, 29 October 2007 15:09 (eighteen years ago)
way way too many captions, often filled with purple prose
sorta nails my issues w/ moore!
― moonship journey to baja, Monday, 29 October 2007 15:18 (eighteen years ago)
I'm not sure Tuomas is reading the same book that I did. Abby/Alec's love was presented as unearthly, but also grounded in the same sorts of experiences that are common to everyone, hence the "Rites of Spring" issue. As for it being a fairy-tale, well, it was presented in a book that was marginally, a superhero book, and superheroes (at the time) were pretty much just modern fairy tales. Though I don't see how you could reconcile that term with the horrors presented with The Monkey King, Arcane and Abby's trip to Hell.
And anyone who didn't start out on text-heavy comics (of which you had many examples in the 60s-80s in the US, actually it was the primary mode) would think that SWAMP THING is completely out of control when it came to text on the page. I actually like it. It feels like it was written as much as it was scripted. Haven't read it in several years, but I'm not sure I'd take the pruning shears to it. Different strokes, etc.
If you think there's a huge difference between SWAMP THING and his other contemporary work, I'd look to his editors and collaborators, since no writer is an island in comics, not even Alan Moore (who at the time was just another new writer and not the titan he is in the field now.)
― Matt M., Monday, 29 October 2007 15:57 (eighteen years ago)
Yeah, I love most everything Moore's done, but I've never been able to get into his Swamp Thing run. Too much caption-itis, etc.
― Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 29 October 2007 15:59 (eighteen years ago)
It is too bad that Swamp Thing has not been put out in some Showcase editions, both the Bernie Wrightson and Totleben/Bissette artwork would look great in black and white.
I got into the Moore run on Swamp Thing pretty early on. It is a pretty crazy book when you think that the thing used to be sold in grocery stores, it wasn't even a direct title until way later on. I have not read any of those issues in twenty years, but they are on my list to go back and check out. I remember the issue where Abby eats the tubar was very trippy and the issues where Batman shows up with one of the Arcane arcs was really great.
― earlnash, Friday, 9 November 2007 22:44 (eighteen years ago)
I've read Moore's run more times than I can count - the first thing of his I ever saw (since it was the first American mass market thing of his available...? I remember seeing issues of Warrior around the same time). I musta been 12-13. The captions do get pretty purple and heavy-handed. Otoh it allows for him to do all kinds of great transitions - stuff he would later get a lot of mileage out of on Watchmen - it made the stories feel bound together by a creepy synchronicity.
― Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 9 November 2007 23:48 (eighteen years ago)
Waiting for Heave Ho to start the Adrianne Barbeau thread on ILHTML.
― Pleasant Plains, Friday, 9 November 2007 23:52 (eighteen years ago)
I'm pretty sure there's some recent (last two or three years) pocket book format pre-Moore Swamp Thing repring.
― Dr. Superman, Saturday, 10 November 2007 05:20 (eighteen years ago)
yo: Secret of Swamp Thing
― Dr. Superman, Saturday, 10 November 2007 05:24 (eighteen years ago)
I guess the Moore run isn't that bad, it's just that too much text in captions is the one thing I hate most in comics, I've left quite a many comics in the shelf that might've been good otherwise (like Sacco's Palestine) because of that. It just totally undermines comics' own strength as a medium, since most of the stuff in the captions could be told with images. Also, it's often even so that the captions could be left off without changing anything else, because the images themselves already tell the story strongly enough, but it feels like the writer doesn't trust the images enough, so he has to include the extra text. This happens in Swamp Thing too, and the reason I find especially strange is that Moore is normally such a visual, anti-caption storyteller.
― Tuomas, Saturday, 10 November 2007 13:25 (eighteen years ago)
"Normally" needs to be placed in context - the majority of his work between 1978 and 1983 is very word-heavy. It's far more the style of the text than the wordiness itself that changed on Swamp Thing.
― energy flash gordon, Sunday, 11 November 2007 00:18 (eighteen years ago)
I haven't read a lot of his early work, but he'd already started V for Vendetta before Swamp Thing and was writing Watchmen around the same time, right? So the wordiness seems more an aesthetic choice than something he hadn't grown out of yet.
― Tuomas, Sunday, 11 November 2007 23:08 (eighteen years ago)
If you have real problems with wordy Alan Moore, check out the final Miracleman book he did.
― The Real Dirty Vicar, Sunday, 11 November 2007 23:13 (eighteen years ago)
I prefer the writing on the Ennis issues (at least until Steve Dillon came onboard), and the art on the Delano issues (although iirc John Rxdgwxy refused to draw some 'blasphemous' content? - (sic) may know more - and also about Eddie's abrupt departure from Hellblazer)
Swamp Thing just seems like one of those titles that has had every possible variation wrung from it and has no real reason to keep on going other than copyright control.
― Ward Fowler, Thursday, 17 June 2021 16:00 (four years ago)
I would agree with that. Even as a huge fan of the character, I quit a short way into the Diggle/Dysart run (v4, I believe?) and haven't returned. Millar's end to v2 is just fine as a stopping point.
― Jerome Percival Jesus (Old Lunch), Thursday, 17 June 2021 16:58 (four years ago)
I really liked Jenkins' Hellblazer run, at least most of it. To me, it felt like he combined elements of the Delano and Ennis versions of the character, but without the worst indulgences of either. Some of the stories related to Constantine's past, which had been kind of confusing up to that point (to me at least), and gave it some clarity. The only downside is that the last three or four stories were a bit aimless and disappointing.
The weird thing with Delano, for me, is that I enjoyed the one-off issue he wrote long after his actual run a lot more than the run itself!
― Duane Barry, Thursday, 17 June 2021 19:59 (four years ago)
Does Constantine ever discover the tree tattoo on his butt that Swampy got when he was controlling Constantine's body? Abby mentions it once but Constantine didn't seem to catch what she was saying. Does this pay off in Hellblazer or something, or did it get forgotten about?
― Cow_Art, Thursday, 17 June 2021 20:01 (four years ago)
idrc, but Constantine gets involved in enough opportunistic sex magick through the years that it probably doesn't bother him
also about Eddie's abrupt departure from Hellblazer
p much what you'd expect - he just didn't get on with the Big Two system of editorial involvement, and bailed out. he especially resisted the editor's chosen plot of sending white magician John to the Australian outback to go on a vision quest with a "witch doctor" from a made-up indigenous people. keen-eyed readers may note that Jenkins' run immediately opens with this cover
afair Campbell's only other stint on an ongoing WFH book was two issues on Captain America this century, in which he confidently drew Iron Man looking like this, having not kept up to date on costume changes in the previous four decades
one issue by Gaiman and Dave McKean as a rare interior artist that is worth looking over
the Morrison/ Lloyd two-parter that ran next to this is also good
― bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Thursday, 17 June 2021 20:44 (four years ago)
https://gizmodo.com/rick-veitch-swamp-thing-ending-oral-history-1989-dc-comics-2000747905
"40 years ago, Swamp Thing was meant to meet Jesus. Then DC backed out. This is Rick Veitch's story of how it happened—and why it's finally being resurrected this month."
(not read article myself yet)
― koogs, Monday, 20 April 2026 10:57 (one month ago)